In an effort to provide consumers with the most current information, Trulia
is now updating the listing data it receives directly from multiple listing
services (MLS) on a continuous basis, the company
said today.
In 2012, Trulia began updating its direct MLS-sourced data four times per
day, after moving to once-a-day updates in late 2011. Now, Trulia checks in with
the MLSs it gets direct feeds from every 10 minutes, and updates listings on its
site accordingly.
Large MLSs providing Trulia with direct feeds include the Houston Association
of Realtors, Midwest Real Estate Data LLC (MRED), Boston area MLS Property
Information Service Inc., Bay Area Real Estate Information Services Inc. in the
San Francisco Bay Area, and Connecticut MLS.
"Our new data processing framework is far mor efficient and reliable,
allowing us to update more feeds and more listings on a continuous basis
throughout the day," said Alon Chaver, vice president of industry services at
Trulia, in a statement.
"It is an obvious advantage to consumers and to our listing brokers to
display only the most current information in Internet advertising," said Russ
Bergeron, CEO of MRED, in a statement. "These changes help the real estate
practitioner throughout our Chicagoland market to more effectively market their
properties and ensure consumers receive the most up-to-date information while
searching for their new home."
Data accuracy and timeliness -- like price and for-sale status -- have been a
headache for third-party portals like Trulia and Zillow. Unlike Realtor.com,
which thanks to its ties to the National Association of Realtors gets listings
directly from most of the nation's MLSs, third-party portals rely on data from a
variety of sources, including MLSs, brokers, agents and listing "syndicators"
like ListHub and Point2.
Article continues below
Trulia CEO Pete Flint
told the audience at Real Estate Connect New York
City this month that the company's focus on data accuracy is "intense."
In 2011, Trulia
launched the Trulia Direct Reference
program, in which MLS data takes precedence over other sources when
discrepancies are found.
Increasingly, Trulia and Zillow are looking for ways to secure access to
accurate data directly from MLSs and brokerages and to sidestep their reliance
on getting listings via ListHub and Point2. Those companies have recently
tightened their data licensing
agreements, restricting how the data can be used, challenging the listing
portals' business models.
In 2012, both
Trulia and
Zillow launched programs where, in
exchange for enhanced listing presence, brokerages provided a direct feed of
their listings to the portals.
Last July, Zillow
made a play for direct data feeds from 50 of the
200 MLSs that Zillow was receiving data from via ListHub, which is owned by
Realtor.com operator Move Inc.
All rights reserved. This content may not be used or
reproduced in any manner whatsoever, in part or in whole, without written
permission of Inman News. Use of this content without permission is a violation
of federal copyright law.
Submitted by James Hurley on January 29, 2013 - 1:54pm.
For consumers using the Truila mobile app, this is great news. Everyone wants access to data that is as close to real time as possible. This improvement to data accuracy is coupled with Trulia's strong mapping capabilities with layers and boundaries built into the app. I have an overview of these features on my blog at:http://maptheroadhome.com/truila-mobile-app/